Microchips for Dogs

Despite our best intentions, dogs get out when we’re sure they can’t. They run through open doors, dig under fences, hop out car windows, and squeeze through tiny little cat doors that you’d swear couldn’t accommodate a squirrel, much less your bouncy dog.

In combination with an ID tag, a microchip is your safest bet for getting your lost dog returned to you safely. These tiny chips are embedded between your dog’s shoulder and, when scanned, can be used to identify your dog and who he belongs to. Anyone who’s ever lost a dog knows that whatever helps you find him again is worth having.

How microchips work

A microchip is about the size of a raw grain of rice and is made of biocompatible material. Using a large syringe, a veterinarian implants it into the skin beneath your dog’s shoulder blades. (Local shelters will often microchip dogs as well, sometimes at a reduced cost.) This placement is permanent. The implantation procedure doesn’t hurt any more than any other injection, and there’s no need for local anesthetic.

A scanner is then used to check that the microchip is working properly. The scanner uses a radio wave set at a certain frequency to turn the microchip on, then sends a signal to the implanted chip. In response, the chip’s number is sent to the scanner. Your contact information is matched to the microchip’s number and sent to a registry. Each microchip has a unique number.

What’s good about microchips

Shelters, animal control personnel, and veterinarians use them to try to identify stray dogs. The registry will show the owners’ contact information. These registries are usually open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Some companies provide a more comprehensive service, such as preauthorizing a financial limit in case your dog is found injured.

Microchips will last 25 years.

What’s bad about microchips

Unfortunately, in the U.S. the system doesn’t quite work smoothly.

There are two different types of microchips on the market. The first microchip that became popular has been in use here since the 1990s. The other (called ISO) has long been used in Europe and was introduced in the U.S. for companion animals in 2003, although it had already been used here for large animals for some time.

Both types of chips use different radio frequencies, with the result that no scanner is compatible with all the microchips out there–even though some are supposed to be universal. If a shelter has a scanner that can’t read the microchip implanted in your dog, the chip is useless in that situation. Some shelters and clinics have multiple scanners, but most can’t afford more than one (they cost several hundred dollars, and shelters are always short of funds). Although some manufacturers state that they have universal scanners, those haven’t worked out as well as hoped.

There’s more than one registry–less helpful than having one big national database.

How to get the most out of a microchip

Ask your local shelter what brand of microchip they use, then ask your veterinarian to use that brand.

If you move, update the microchip registry with your new contact information; otherwise, the microchip will be useless if your dog gets lost. (Dogs can easily panic and disappear during the frenzy of moving.) Also, make sure you update them if you get rid of your landline or change your number for whatever

If you’ve moved to a new area and your new shelter uses a different scanner, call the microchip manufacturer and ask if they will donate one to your shelter.